TY - JOUR
T1 - The minimal eukaryotic ribosomal DNA units in the primitive red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae
AU - Maruyama, Shinichiro
AU - Misumi, Osami
AU - Ishii, Yasuyuki
AU - Asakawa, Shuichi
AU - Shimizu, Atsushi
AU - Sasaki, Takashi
AU - Matsuzaki, Motomichi
AU - Shin-I, Tadasu
AU - Nozaki, Hisayoshi
AU - Kohara, Yuji
AU - Shimizu, Nobuyoshi
AU - Kuroiwa, Tsuneyoshi
PY - 2004
Y1 - 2004
N2 - Cyanidioschyzon merolae is a small unicellular red alga that is considered to belong to one of the most deeply branched taxa in the plant kingdom. Its genome size is estimated to be 16.5 Mbp, one of the smallest among free-living eukaryotes. In the nucleus containing this small genome, one nucleolus is clearly observed, but the molecular basis for the intranuclear structure including ribosomal DNA organization is still unclear. We constructed a bacterial artificial chromosome library for C. merolae 10D composed of two subsets with different insert size distributions. The two subsets have average insert sizes of 97 and 48 kb, representing 10.0- and 6.9-fold genome-equivalent coverage of the haploid genome, respectively. For application to whole-genome shotgun sequencing, the termini of each clone were sequenced as sequence-tagged connectors and mapped on the contigs assigned to chromosomes. Screening for rRNA genes by conventional colony hybridization with high-density filter blots and subsequent sequencing revealed that the C. merolae genome contained the smallest number of ribosomal DNA units among all the eukaryotes examined to date. They consist of only 3 single units of rRNA genes distributed on separate chromosomal loci, representing an implication for concerted evolution. Based on these results, the origin and evolution of the nucleolus are discussed.
AB - Cyanidioschyzon merolae is a small unicellular red alga that is considered to belong to one of the most deeply branched taxa in the plant kingdom. Its genome size is estimated to be 16.5 Mbp, one of the smallest among free-living eukaryotes. In the nucleus containing this small genome, one nucleolus is clearly observed, but the molecular basis for the intranuclear structure including ribosomal DNA organization is still unclear. We constructed a bacterial artificial chromosome library for C. merolae 10D composed of two subsets with different insert size distributions. The two subsets have average insert sizes of 97 and 48 kb, representing 10.0- and 6.9-fold genome-equivalent coverage of the haploid genome, respectively. For application to whole-genome shotgun sequencing, the termini of each clone were sequenced as sequence-tagged connectors and mapped on the contigs assigned to chromosomes. Screening for rRNA genes by conventional colony hybridization with high-density filter blots and subsequent sequencing revealed that the C. merolae genome contained the smallest number of ribosomal DNA units among all the eukaryotes examined to date. They consist of only 3 single units of rRNA genes distributed on separate chromosomal loci, representing an implication for concerted evolution. Based on these results, the origin and evolution of the nucleolus are discussed.
KW - BAG library
KW - Genome organization
KW - Nucleolus
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U2 - 10.1093/dnares/11.2.83
DO - 10.1093/dnares/11.2.83
M3 - Article
C2 - 15449541
AN - SCOPUS:19944424446
SN - 1340-2838
VL - 11
SP - 83
EP - 91
JO - DNA Research
JF - DNA Research
IS - 2
ER -